I maaay or may not have named it that myself for the sake of brevity. >x>Who has ever used the term "Diversitypocalypse"?
*runs off to sleep for the night*
Happy to see the thread be positively received btw. <3
I maaay or may not have named it that myself for the sake of brevity. >x>Who has ever used the term "Diversitypocalypse"?
I have played Spirit Tracks, but the Spirit Train is a gameplay tool. It's the gameplay core of that game, it's not the damn core of the Legend of Zelda saga\narrative.
As for Federation Force lmao please.
I was obviously referring to a mainline Metroid but if you want to go down that road sure, you can play Zelda in Hyrule Warriors. Problem solved.
So long as your not fighting to limit games to just your own particular view of what you like to see then there isn't really a problem. Games like Senran Kagura aren't going anywhere, if you like them that's fine. It's when you make arguements that all games should be like Senran Kagura or that Senran Kagura doesn't have it's own faults that you've gone overboard.
g e n d e r l e s s d y s t o p i a
we are pretty much creating problems.
we search for problems which never were existing. the golden age of gaming is long over, when games were just created to be games and nothing else.
not everything is political, racist, or patriarchal, which makes my head boggle.
How come that games which were released in the 90s were done in a better way?
i remember the discussion about ff13 when people even on GAF tried to convince that black people should stay out of a FF game.(ff7 had a black character too and was released 1997)
cant we take that political stick out of the games ass?
dont make games into something they never were.
i like the female who are sometimes too sexy, and sometimes who look like a nun, i like the dude-bro-characters as well as the weeaboo-characters.
for a change, let there be LGBT characters or black/yellow/whatever characters without fearing that "sales" will drop or whatever.
i play the game, when it is good. if it has something, which has never been before, its even better.
I have a question for you dear gaf buddies about something about my integrity and my hobbies; I love some "problematic" stuff like the well known Senran Kagura, Dead or Alive, Vanillaware games and such things.
For one side, I don't want to be part of the problem as being part of the fanbase of something that sexualizes women, for other side I also think that If I have that open mindset and work for a better media... That counts as being not bad?
I had this struggle for years now and I want some perspective
Nothing, really. Every group has products targeted specifically at them, that's the reality of fiction, it's perfectly normal. But it's this idea that diversity in games ONLY exists to "pander" to the "feels" of sensitive SJWs or something, not because, you know, gay/trans/black/disabled/female people exist in real life and are as deserving of representation of the Straight White Man.
Sex isn't evil but it is dangerous. Moreover, a lot of what people want to encourage is sexual content, as you are saying. This makes the threads incredibly tangled.
My problem is a) I don't want a game culture completely drenched in fanservice, b) fanservice does lend itself to objectification and fetishization, c) I do not think a completely dry medium is where we want/need to be either, d) it is hard to untangle what I like seeing from what I think is in good taste.
I think what you're saying risks violating a), and by way of that b). It risks the world where everything is just playing to fetish and lust, but in an equal opportunity sort of way. It could be moderated, but that runs into d).
The other way of trying to defuse b) is to risk c). But people who want b), usually also want greater expression of other sexualities, female and LGTBQ and c) is antithetical to that. Many arguments run very prudish and they run contrary to other social justice concerns. Again, some sort of moderation is in order, but that runs into d).
The problem I'm trying to draw out is that many arguments in these threads don't know where they are trying to go and/or the tools they use to get there are overpowered. But something about them still rings true! And that is the knot that needs to be untangled imo.
I mean, there is no rule that says porn games can't have good game play, there are plenty of porn games that have good game play, or a good narrative outside of the porn, etc. But those games are limited in reach because of the fanservice/porn aspects, and there is nothing wrong with that either. If you like dead or alive because it's a competent fighter and is all about the sexy ladies, that's fine. But don't be upset that people take issue with the extreme focus on the sexy ladies being dressed up in bathing suits and having a spinoff game about beach volleyball. Like what you like, sure, but recognize the flaws of the games you like, and be respectful of dissenting opinions.
It's fine to like stuff that (as long as the game itself is actually good) and it's entirely possible to do so and still respect women and push for better representation.
Amazing thread OP!
One of the best in here
I have a question for you dear gaf buddies about something about my integrity and my hobbies; I love some "problematic" stuff like the well known Senran Kagura, Dead or Alive, Vanillaware games and such things.
For one side, I don't want to be part of the problem as being part of the fanbase of something that sexualizes women, for other side I also think that If I have that open mindset and work for a better media... That counts as being not bad?
I had this struggle for years now and I want some perspective
Then the thread focuses on single quote.Lastly Id like to shortly touch on people shifting the discussion to being about the source of a story rather than the story itself.
Sexualized games -especially the ones focused on that- are, in my opinion, simply lite porn. It's not your fault that you have a sexuality and you enjoy games like SK and DoA based on that. It was designed to appeal to people like you. That's perfectly fine. If you encourage the diversification of games overall, and games that don't solely appeal to a single demographic, then I think you're A-OK.
we are pretty much creating problems.
we search for problems which never were existing. the golden age of gaming is long over, when games were just created to be games and nothing else.
not everything is political, racist, or patriarchal, which makes my head boggle.
How come that games which were released in the 90s were done in a better way?
i remember the discussion about ff13 when people even on GAF tried to convince that black people should stay out of a FF game.(ff7 had a black character too and was released 1997)
cant we take that political stick out of the games ass?
dont make games into something they never were.
i like the female who are sometimes too sexy, and sometimes who look like a nun, i like the dude-bro-characters as well as the weeaboo-characters.
for a change, let there be LGBT characters or black/yellow/whatever characters without fearing that "sales" will drop or whatever.
i play the game, when it is good. if it has something, which has never been before, its even better.
My point still stands. I feel this is one of those cases where it's forced for no reason.
Do we need a Metroid game with a male protagonist for a change? I don't get it. There's plenty of other Nintendo games with female leads but since it's not into that one...
There has been a lot of discussion on The Witcher 3 and the lack of coloured people in it already but time and time again I see people like the author of this article equating diversity with skin colour. They are not the same. I find it really sad that a game heavily influenced by Slavic folklore and created by a people with such a rich and painful history is reduced to 'stories of white people'.
But samus doesn't reincarnate like Link does. It's a continued story with the same character. In general there is an easy in-lore reason for why Link can be female. I mean Link's handed-ness even changes so it proves that each Link doesn't have to be an exact carbon-copy of the last one.
I remember in the old Link should be a girl threads people kept making the dumb comparison of "why don't you complain that "X character" isn't a female in the next game." And they just refused to understand that the character they're arguing doesn't become another person or maybe refused to acknowledge how that made them wrong.
Even beyond this, the "what if Samus became a guy" line of reasoning is infuriating and stupid because it ignores the societal context in which the decision is being made. Changing a character to an underrepresented group from an over represented one has entirely different social and ethical implications than the reverseBut samus doesn't reincarnate like Link does. It's a continued story with the same character. In general there is an easy in-lore reason for why Link can be female. I mean Link's handed-ness even changes so it proves that each Link doesn't have to be an exact carbon-copy of the last one.
I remember in the old Link should be a girl threads people kept making the dumb comparison of "why don't you complain that "X character" isn't a female in the next game." And they just refused to understand that the character they're arguing doesn't become another person or maybe refused to acknowledge how that made them wrong.
"Let's have Maria instead of Mario"
But seriously this. People think others want a female Link just for the lols, when in actuality this is one of the few series that could justify it if the developers wanted to go down that route. Then you get vague comments from Aonuma, and Linkle being a thing, and of course people would get more and more receptive to the idea.
Even beyond this, the "what if Samus became a guy" line of reasoning is infuriating and stupid because it ignores the societal context in which the decision is being made. Changing a character to an underrepresented group from an over represented one has entirely different social and ethical implications than the reverse
"Let's have Maria instead of Mario"
This has way less to do with criticizing a single game and more to do with a problem that pervades the entire industry and using certain games and developers to highlight said issueUnderrated post. Context matters too.
Diversity for the sake of diversity isn't tha way to go.
Also it's worth mentioning that most of the discussions about this topic is negative. The approach of pick a game and criticize the hell of it for what it's not, creates a lot of hostility, which is unnecessary in my opinion.
Arguing for the status quo to remain because "its been that way for decades" is and will always be one of the worst possible arguments. The world's game was created in a certain way? It was created in an absolutely arbitrary way, and the only reason it doesnt change is not because it "cant" change, it is for, again, arbitrary reasons by the creators.
At this point it just feels like things are the way you want to see them despite who made the game, so I won't bother with more answers.the train is the core of the game's narrative, it's everywhere in that game.
You can escape it no less than you can escape motion control in Skyward Sword.
Link being male is not the core of the saga at all.
His name was Link
But what does reincarnation have to do with the fact that "the hero" is always male? This doesn't really seem a good point to me, sorry.But samus doesn't reincarnate like Link does. It's a continued story with the same character. In general there is an easy in-lore reason for why Link can be female. I mean Link's handed-ness even changes so it proves that each Link doesn't have to be an exact carbon-copy of the last one.
I remember in the old Link should be a girl threads people kept making the dumb comparison of "why don't you complain that "X character" isn't a female in the next game." And they just refused to understand that the character they're arguing doesn't become another person or maybe refused to acknowledge how that made them wrong.
For Mario, I think people really want to control Peach like they did in SMB2 or SM3DW...
I'd argue that Linkle is actually worse than just female Link or no one at all.
From what little I've seen she's a walking stereotype.
Can't find her way or whatever.
It's not that hard to make female characters that aren't total shit.
Kinda like saying that Link can't be black or something.
You can have a fucking starship in a medieval setting but making a scenario where Link isn't a white boy is stretching it?
At this point it just feels like things are the way you want to see them despite who made the game, so I won't bother with more answers.
His name was Link
In my head, I could see Linkle working. The idea of a protagonist that embodies the mindset of "Fake it till you make it" sounds interesting to me. Where it's like nah girl, you are not the hero we've been waiting for, but she gets to prove herself anyways. Sort of like Wind Waker I guess, if I recall it correctly.
Also, I like her bowguns.
Who said Link was a white boy lol
Male Samus is a stupid thing for obvious reasons. The whole awesome point about Samus was that everyone just assumed she was a dude until she wasn't. And then nothing changed.
Until Other M of course
Are you serious..Look, I agree in principle with what you say. But it's an overreaction. Should the next Mario game have a female lead? Should Mario look african? Should one Metroid feature a man?
I mean... why? It seems that it needs to happen just to prove a point about it being otherwise sexist that isn't there in this case.
But what does reincarnation have to do with the fact that "the hero" is always male? This doesn't really seem a good point to me, sorry.
Heck it didn't even matter in Metroid till that fucking Other M.
This has way less to do with criticizing a single game and more to do with a problem that pervades the entire industry and using certain games and developers to highlight said issue
The entire industry is not American, and thus does not share the same cultural experience and politics as contemporary America.
This absolutely needs to be factored in because you cannot expect a global industry to change in lockstep when the voices lobbying for change are simply not going to be heard or given great import due to barriers of culture and language.
Culture of origin influences all art and entertainment, no matter how benign the intent you cannot expect every work to conform to your native socio-political norms.
This has way less to do with criticizing a single game and more to do with a problem that pervades the entire industry and using certain games and developers to highlight said issue
Literally was in the process of making this thread but this'll do and is likely better than I would've come up with.. Seriously, having to explain basic human rights and feminism 101 to disengenous people who are the target audience gets incredibly tiring, especially recently. Like come the fuck on, you KNOW exactly why the objectification of women in games is wrong yet try to phrase it with bullshit questions like "What's wrong with sexy women in gamez?" Bookmarking this thread for future use.
Creators should make the things they want to make.
People should buy the things that resonate with them.
Not immediately villainizing designers/artists for sexy designs = "objectification is A-OK/feminism is dumb lol"
No need to actually try and refute arguments and address perspectives that differ from your own. Smug shitposts are all we need since everything apparently boils down to "human rights and feminism 101." It's not at all like feminism is itself many schools of thought or anything.
I too look forward to future disingenuousness and bad faith arguments on your part.
Which will happen first, a female Link or a female Doctor?
So Zelda couldn't ever be a protagonist of a LoZ game because Link is always the link between the player and the game?
Designers should be held to a higher standard when they develop characters because this shit often reinforces harmful stereotypes that actually are damaging to women. Sexualization itself isn't necessarily a bad thing except so many characters and games do it is one sided. No one is saying you can't enjoy your hyper sexualization or your tits and ass, they are saying in the grand scheme of gaming as a whole some of these things "can" create a poisonous environment for women.
Oh, it was just personal. Nm
It's a little personal, yes. I agree with you, I mean, that's the exact case I've been making in the "recent" threads CE is referencing in his post. Apparently I'm quite wrong and the argument isn't as nuanced as you put it.
Very good OP! Except for Zelda thing(I get that the argument is bullshit)I really agree.
I think that Zelda has to be called when portraying characters in a bad way. And not because it doesn't have a female protagonist. People like Link as the main character and are really attached to him. That's all.
TLOZ is to Link the same that Samus is to Metroid. Fuck that reincarnation bullshit, people just want to play as Link.
The entire industry is not American, and thus does not share the same cultural experience and politics as contemporary America. This absolutely needs to be factored in because you cannot expect a global industry to change in lockstep when the voices lobbying for change are simply not going to be heard or given great import due to barriers of culture and language.
Culture of origin influences all art and entertainment, no matter how benign the intent you cannot expect every work to conform to your native socio-political norms.
Very good OP! Except for Zelda thing(I get that the argument is bullshit)I really agree.
I think that Zelda has to be called when portraying characters in a bad way. And not because it doesn't have a female protagonist. People like Link as the main character and are really attached to him. That's all.
TLOZ is to Link the same that Samus is to Metroid. Fuck that reincarnation bullshit, people just want to play as Link.
Personally, I'm more interested in fresh ideas instead of disrupting a 20 years old lore just for the sake of "see, we can put a female".
I'd like more stuff like Life is Strange, Another Code. I can happily share the "more games with a female avatar should be made" sentiment - but that's a different thing.
Or even just games where from scratch you can pick.
Objectification is fine; sex is fine; nudity is fine; ridiculous and even gross fantasies are probably fine too.
It's the one-sidedness about which gender is objectified in practice that's always been the issue.
Is that the most crucial thing about playing a Zelda game to you? What if like the world's shittiest Zelda game came out? Would you be like, "fuck it, at least I'm Link?"
Isn't the point of topics like this to raise that awareness?
The entire industry is not American, and thus does not share the same cultural experience and politics as contemporary America. This absolutely needs to be factored in because you cannot expect a global industry to change in lockstep when the voices lobbying for change are simply not going to be heard or given great import due to barriers of culture and language.
Culture of origin influences all art and entertainment, no matter how benign the intent you cannot expect every work to conform to your native socio-political norms.
Is that the most crucial thing about playing a Zelda game to you? What if like the world's shittiest Zelda game came out? Would you be like, "fuck it, at least I'm Link?"
I wonder how many people would legitimately not buy the next Zelda game if Link was a girl instead.
Brava. This is a fantastic OP and truly encapsulates a lot of the annoyance and frustration I have with these topics in Gaming Side lately.